

Puella Magi Madoka Magica: The Magical Girls use their Soul Gems to activate and fuel their powers, but it turns out that there's quite a bit more to the gems than they realize at first.

#Create your own ghost rider games series
Tokyo Mew Mew, which was a short manga series called Tokyo Black Catgirl and successfully brought the Magical Girl team into the 2000s.The Pretty Cure series, in which fairies bestow their powers onto ordinary schoolgirls to battle monsters and save both their world and that of the fairies.However, we only see her do it on a few occasions, and with relatively minor magic. She can use her magical powers without transforming. Although Nanoha has a Transformation Sequence, all it does is summon her Barrier Jacket (combat uniform). Lyrical Nanoha does something odd with this trope.She uses a different henshin call in each program where she makes an appearance to transfrom. It also had a live-action adaptation called Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon from the folks behind Kamen Rider and Super Sentai. Young schoolgirl Usagi Tsukino discovers she's the reincarnation of the titular ancient lunar warrior from the Moon Kingdom and uses her newfound powers to protect Earth from the forces of evil. Sailor Moon is one of the best-known Magical Girl-based examples of the trope.Devil Hunter Yohko, in which boy-crazy sixteen-year-old schoolgirl Yohko Mano can become a demon slayer to banish the forces of evil from Earth.His "powered-up" form has More Teeth than the Osmond Family and barely resembles him at all. Later on she's exorcised, but he gets to keep the powers. Dandadan: Turbo-Granny's possession of Okarun allows him to go into a Superpowered Evil Side twice a day, with superhuman speed, strength, and reflexes.The anime more closely fits the trope than the manga, which was mostly just a Cute Witch series.
